Up & Coming Weekly

July 18, 2017

Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.

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JULY 19-25, 2017 UCW 13 WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM North Carolina envi- ronmental officials have received data from the first rounds of water sampling in the Cape Fear River to test for the unregulated chemical GenX. The N.C. Depart- ment of Environmental Quality received the first sets of water qual- ity data from the Test America lab in Colora- do for further analysis. The data comes from water samples collected June 19-29 near the Fayetteville Chemours facility, which makes GenX, and from water treatment facilities in the Fayetteville and Wilmington areas. The industrial chemical is produced at a plant just inside Bladen County from Cumberland County. DuPont began using the compound called GenX to produce many consumer products, including Teflon. Chemours, a DuPont subsid- iary that makes GenX, insists it's safe, but it has been linked with cancer and other serious health problems. Little is known about the relatively new industrial chemical's health effects. There are no U.S. regulatory guide- line levels for GenX. Test samples first col- lected three years ago detected the chemi- cal in the water sup- ply for southeastern North Carolina at levels considered to pose a low risk to humans. Chemours said it would capture, remove and safely dispose of the wastewater that con- tains GenX from the Cape Fear River. But the N.C. Depart- ment of Environmental Quality and the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services will continue to investigate the issue. Once the analy- ses are completed, both agencies will share the re- sults and updated health risk assessments with the public. It will be of special interest in Wilmington, where some officials charge that the river water is contaminated. Officials have collected water samples in 12 locations near Fayetteville and Wilmington and are wrapping up a fourth round of tests. A 13th location upstream of the Chemours facil- ity — Fayetteville PWC's Hoffer Water Treatment Plant — was added to the sampling regimen. State officials will base future sampling decisions on the results. Separate samples were sent for analysis to two labs capable of detecting GenX at low concen- trations: Test America and the EPA's lab in the Re- search Triangle Park. Both labs continue to receive and analyze data from the water samples collected and will make that data available to state officials during the coming days and weeks. "Our goal is to make the public aware of our findings as soon as possible," said Michael Regan, secretary of the Department of Environmental Quality. "We will continue to report the results of the analyses in the coming days and weeks." Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy Cohen said public health staff is working with the Environmental Protection Agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and academic re- searchers to better understand any possible health risks associated with GenX. "There is limited information available … but we are working every day with our federal partners and academic researchers to better understand everything we can about this unregulated com- pound," Cohen said. Fayetteville Plant the Subject of Controversy by JEFF THOMPSON GenX, an unregulated chemical, has made its way into the Cape Fear River. NEWS JEFF THOMPSON, Senior News Reporter. COMMENTS? news@upandcomingweekly. com. (910) 484-6200. WEDNESDAYS 10A - 2P •CHEF DEMOS! BRONCO SQUARE MURCHISON RD Across from Campus of Fayetteville State University Broccoli, Bok Choy, Non-GMO Corn, Cucumbers, Green Beans, Onions, Red Potatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Squash, Tomatoes, Zucchini PRODUCT LIST

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